The Physician and Surgeon, Volume 12

Front Cover
Keating & Bryant, 1890
 

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Page 331 - Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased ; Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow ; Raze out the written troubles of the brain ; And, with some sweet oblivious antidote, Cleanse the stuff'd bosom of that perilous stuff Which weighs upon the heart ? Doct.
Page 325 - s the disease he means ? Mai. 'T is call'd the evil ; A most miraculous Work in this good king : Which often, since my here-remain in England, I have seen him do. How he solicits heaven, Himself best knows : but strangely-visited people, All swoln and ulcerous, pitiful to the eye, The mere despair of surgery, he cures ; Hanging a. golden stamp about their necks, Put on with holy prayers : and 't is spoken, To the succeeding royalty he leaves The healing benediction.
Page 267 - A NEW MEDICAL DICTIONARY: Including all the words and phrases used in Medicine, with their proper Pronunciation and Definitions, based on Recent Medical Literature. By George M. Gould, BA, MD, Ophthalmic Surgeon to the Philadelphia Hospital, etc.
Page 221 - BY HENRY D. NOYES, AM, MD Professor of Ophthalmology and Otology in Bellevue Hospital Medical College ; Executive Surgeon to the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary ; recently President of the American Ophthalmological Society...
Page 544 - MD, Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Baltimore.
Page 118 - Send for descriptive circular. Physicians who wish to test it will be furnished a bottle on application, without expense, except express charges. Prepared under the direction of Prof. EN HORSFORD, by the Rumford Chemical Works, Providence, RI BEWARE OF SUBSTITUTES AND IMITATIONS. CAUTION :— Be sure the word " HORSFORD'S
Page 225 - Burney Yeo, MD, FRCP, Professor of Clinical Therapeutics in King's College, London, and Physician to King's College Hospital.
Page 262 - OLD AGE. The Results of Information received respecting nearly nine hundred persons who had attained the age of eighty years, including seventy-four centenarians.
Page 224 - Essentials of Materia Medica, Therapeutics and Prescription Writing, arranged in the form of Questions and Answers. Prepared especially for Students of Medicine...
Page 212 - ... a small one; the ideas and feelings suggested are not numerous and massive enough to carry off the nervous energy to be expended. The excess must therefore discharge itself in some other direction; and in the way already explained, there results an efflux through the motor nerves to various classes of the muscles, producing the half-convulsive actions we term laughter.

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